Polling guru John Curtice insisted that the Labour Party’s post-Brexit strategy had failed. After hearing the news that Conservative Party Candidate Jill Mortimer was to become Hartlepool’s MP, he criticised Labour’s choice in a candidate. While speaking on the Today Programme, he
Sir John Curtice has warned Sir Keir Starmer that he is in for a tough night on Thursday as Britons take to the polls. The leading British polling guru spoke with George Galloway on his Mother of All Talk Shows this evening. He
Sir John Curtice says recent strong polling for the Conservatives suggests that Sir Keir Starmer is facing a “very, very sticky wicket” and argues that Labour will struggle to win over voters in parts of the country that voted for Brexit. Labour
Professor John Curtice has crunched the latest polling numbers ahead of the Holyrood vote on May 6 and suggested the SNP could miss out on a majority. The party has vowed to hold a second independence referendum, seven years after the failed 2014
Alex Salmond was unveiled as leader of Scotland’s newest political party – which is fielding 32 candidates on the regional list section of the Holyrood ballot. He has said he is “confident” membership of his party will “overtake that of the Liberal
John Curtice was invited onto BBC News ahead of the five-way Scottish leaders’ debate on Tuesday evening. The polling expert insisted that while the SNP had secured extra support for independence through Nicola Sturgeon’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic, those same voters
Alex Salmond confirmed his new party, the Alba Party, would seek to stand on regional lists to “fill a void” the SNP has been unable to plug in recent elections. The former First Minister of Scotland insisted that taking over the regional
Professor John Curtice was invited to give his election predictions after the former First Minister Alex Salmond announced via Zoom on Friday he was launching the new pro-independence party ALBA. Several candidates for the newly-formed party announced their intention to run in the Scottish